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== Animacies by Mel Y. Chen ==
== Animacies by Mel Y. Chen ==
- The alchemical power of language to animate depending of citizenship, race, sex , ability, sexuality<br>
- The alchemical power of language to animate depending of citizenship, race, sex , ability, sexuality<br>
- hierarchilised bodies of interest <br>
- "animacies interrogates how the fragile division between animate and inanimate-that is beyond human and animal- is relentlessly produced and policed and maps important political consequences of that distinction. <br>
- "animacies interrogates how the fragile division between animate and inanimate-that is beyond human and animal- is relentlessly produced and policed and maps important political consequences of that distinction. <br>
- animacy as quality of agency, awareness, mobility, liveness <br>
- animacy as quality of agency, awareness, mobility, liveness <br>

Revision as of 15:08, 9 November 2022

Situated Knowledges By Donna Harraway

Who has a body?
We don't want to represent the world.
We don't want one body
Universality is reductionism
Prosthesis and not objectivity
All vision has an embodied nature
The body is an agent not a resource
How to see from below?
Vision requires instruments of vision
Who can and who cannot?
How to see?
Where to see from?
What limits to vision?
What to see for?'
What other sensory powers do we wish to cultivate besides vision?
Location is about vulnerability
Situated knowledges are about communities and not about individuals
Sex as an object of biological knowledge
Situated knowledges require that the object of knowledge is an actor or agent
Conversation vs discovery
Bodies as objects of knowledge are material-semiotic, generative nodes

keywords
subjugated knowledges
location
embodiment
partial perspective
politics of vision
fantastic imaginings
local knowledges

Counter-sexual Manifesto by Paul B. Preciado

Introducing the dildo as an apparatus for deconstructing gender and sexual difference, approaching critically the "biological truths" that frame living bodies. Genitals are considered as biopolitical technology. Sex is read as a technology. The book is constructed through a manifesto, three counter-sexual exercises for generating dildos, theories around how the technology of the dildo can subvert the naturalisation of heteronosexuality, the genealogy of sex toys, the historicity of the western standardisation of gender, the fabrication of living bodies through technologies and a series of counter-sexual reading exercises.

Shell Song

A website that host the vocal and textual narration of a trans man, who gave his voice to Librivox before his transition. His voice through copyright policy got later used for AI training. This narration is an entaglement of thoughts around his own voice dysphoria journey, the materiality of a living body's voice, its restoration as a body capture, the politics of AI voice sampling around standardising gender - binary frequencies, the framing of "pleasant" voices and establishing low wages or forced labor for its creation.
https://pad.xpub.nl/p/shell_song

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Animacies by Mel Y. Chen

- The alchemical power of language to animate depending of citizenship, race, sex , ability, sexuality
- "animacies interrogates how the fragile division between animate and inanimate-that is beyond human and animal- is relentlessly produced and policed and maps important political consequences of that distinction.
- animacy as quality of agency, awareness, mobility, liveness
- "western tradition does not generally recognize a "continuum of animacy"..

Pleasure Activism by maree brown

On sonic art + Red bird by Trevor Wishart

https://www.soundohm.com/product/red-bird-a-political-pris

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lekLl7o8yrc

Deep listening by Pauline Oliveros

"What is Deep Listening? This question is answered in the process of practicing listening with the understanding that the complex wave forms continuously transmitted to the auditory cortex from the outside world by the ear require active engagement with attention. Prompted by experience and learning, listening takes place voluntarily. Listening is not the same as hearing and hearing is not the same as listening. The ear is constantly gathering and transmitting information—however attention to the auditory cortex can be tuned out. Very little of the information transmitted to the brain by the sense organs is perceived at a conscious level. Reactions can take place without consciousness."

This track may contain politics by Hannes Liechti

From the author, page 10
" In this book, I argue that analysis of the culture of sampling is one possible way to access particular narratives of this world. The inclusion of external music, environmental noises, or found media material brings the world into popular music tracks in a condensed form. Timothy Taylor (2001, 139) describes sampling as providing “aural glimpses of the social.” Every process of sampling represents a complex net of contexts, meanings, choices, creative decisions, and musical strategies. In-depth analysis of such processes and their socio-cultural ramifications means revealing and interpreting this net as far as possible."
Why has a particular sound been sampled?
This book focuses on electronic musical tracks that contain political sampling material

Lara Sarkisian - Kenats
https://soundcloud.com/larasarkissian/kenats?in=evolution-fan/sets/warm-water
Moro - Libres
https://open.spotify.com/track/3Kk97Sf0tW3YpUhNTBuZGr
sampling with political intent

Sampling with political intent
One Pig from Mathew Herbert--> processed sounds from a pig's life to criticise globalised food industry
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOyllh4UG-U&list=OLAK5uy_mV2FXXq-jjLswh4ErmxpuRt8utltd3uIE

Apotome project by Kyam Allami

https://khyamallami.com/Apotome-Khyam-Allami-x-Counterpoint

Cyber manifesto by Donna Harraway